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|price=$200,000,000
 
|price=$200,000,000
 
|predecessor=Titan
 
|predecessor=Titan
|predecessor link=supercomputers/titan
+
|predecessor link=supercomputers/olcf-3
 
|successor=Frontier
 
|successor=Frontier
|successor link=supercomputers/frontier
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|successor link=supercomputers/olcf-5
 
}}
 
}}
 
'''Summit''' ('''OLCF-4''') is {{\\|Titan|Titan's}} successor, a 200-petaFLOP [[supercomputer]] operating by the [[DoE]] [[Oak Ridge National Laboratory]]. Summit was officially unveiled on June 8, 2018 as the fastest supercomputer in the world, overtaking the {{sc|Sunway TaihuLight}}. Summit is expected to be succeeded by {{\\|Frontier}} in 2021.
 
'''Summit''' ('''OLCF-4''') is {{\\|Titan|Titan's}} successor, a 200-petaFLOP [[supercomputer]] operating by the [[DoE]] [[Oak Ridge National Laboratory]]. Summit was officially unveiled on June 8, 2018 as the fastest supercomputer in the world, overtaking the {{sc|Sunway TaihuLight}}. Summit is expected to be succeeded by {{\\|Frontier}} in 2021.

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designerIBM + and Nvidia +
introductory dateJune 8, 2018 +
logoFile:olcf-4 summit logo.png +
main imageFile:ornl summit front shot.jpg +
nameSummit +
operatorOak Ridge National Laboratory +
peak flops (double-precision)2.0e+17 FLOPS (200,000,000,000,000 KFLOPS, 200,000,000,000 MFLOPS, 200,000,000 GFLOPS, 200,000 TFLOPS, 200 PFLOPS, 0.2 EFLOPS, 2.0e-4 ZFLOPS) +
release price$ 200,000,000.00 (€ 180,000,000.00, £ 162,000,000.00, ¥ 20,666,000,000.00) +
sponsorUnited States Department of Energy (DOE) +